Did you make this instructable?

If you have a movie camera, getting past a locked door is trivial. First you have someone film you walking up to the door. Then you have them cut away to a view from inside the door that shows you opening it. Heck, you can even have them simply teleport you into the room. Of course the problem is that you first have to teleport the camera in there, so this becomes an interesting problem in recursion.

Most digital locks are specifically designed to be tamper resistant; if you just "try combinations", they detect that and shut down for some length of time, making the search impractical. Theoretically you might be able to try a Tempest attack (analysing the RFI emitted by the lock) -- but that takes NSA-level expertise and can be prevented in several semi-trivial ways, the simplest being to put the lock's logic at some distance from the door in an unknown direction and to use ferrite cores to keep the RFI from travelling down the wire to the keypad.

There may be specific ways to defeat specific locks -- but they're different for every lock, and they require a lot more sophistication than simply waving a magic wand at it, no matter how technological the wand looks or how many blinky lights it has.

(Someday, I really want to invent the Positronic Logic Orthogonal Transistor -- just so I can build real-world PLOT devices.)